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07-08-2015, 02:52 PM
Though millennials are often stereotyped as lazy, selfish and entitled (http://www.cnbc.com/id/102599942), new research has again shown that donating to charities and volunteering are important to today’s young professionals (http://start.westnet.ca/newstempch.php?article=2014/06/18/millennials-volunteer-charity-giving_n_5507778.html).
Eighty-four percent of the 1,584 millennial workers surveyed made a charitable donation last year, according to the 2015 Millennial Impact Report (http://www.themillennialimpact.com/research/).
The findings, conducted by the consulting firm Achieve, shed light on what motivates millennials to participate in company-driven charity work. According to the report, millennials’ relationships with their peer coworkers were more influential than their relationships with their managers when it comes to motivating them to participate in cause work.
In addition, though peer influence, competition and incentives to volunteer or donate could boost their participation, millennials are most engaged in company giving when they are passionate about the cause or issue at hand.
The findings are significant, according to the report’s lead researcher and Achieve president Derrick Feldmann, because it is in workplaces’ favor to shape their culture in a way that caters to millennials’ “do-gooder” tendencies, especially since the millennial generation now represents the majority of the U.S. workforce (http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/05/11/millennials-surpass-gen-xers-as-the-largest-generation-in-u-s-labor-force/).
“The millennial generation is influential,” Feldmann wrote in the report. “From their buying power to their handle on the limitless potential of social media, millennials can address issues and be a voice for causes like no other generation before them.”
Millennials, born between 1980 and the mid-2000s, are said to be reshaping the worlds of charity and online giving. Previous reports have dubbed millennials the “giving generation” (http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/12/11/millennials-most-giving/3962781/), and noted that millennials prefer to see their contributions as investments (http://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/10/13/338295367/how-millennials-are-reshaping-charity-and-online-giving) in a cause they care about instead of solely a donation.
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Eighty-four percent of the 1,584 millennial workers surveyed made a charitable donation last year, according to the 2015 Millennial Impact Report (http://www.themillennialimpact.com/research/).
The findings, conducted by the consulting firm Achieve, shed light on what motivates millennials to participate in company-driven charity work. According to the report, millennials’ relationships with their peer coworkers were more influential than their relationships with their managers when it comes to motivating them to participate in cause work.
In addition, though peer influence, competition and incentives to volunteer or donate could boost their participation, millennials are most engaged in company giving when they are passionate about the cause or issue at hand.
The findings are significant, according to the report’s lead researcher and Achieve president Derrick Feldmann, because it is in workplaces’ favor to shape their culture in a way that caters to millennials’ “do-gooder” tendencies, especially since the millennial generation now represents the majority of the U.S. workforce (http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/05/11/millennials-surpass-gen-xers-as-the-largest-generation-in-u-s-labor-force/).
“The millennial generation is influential,” Feldmann wrote in the report. “From their buying power to their handle on the limitless potential of social media, millennials can address issues and be a voice for causes like no other generation before them.”
Millennials, born between 1980 and the mid-2000s, are said to be reshaping the worlds of charity and online giving. Previous reports have dubbed millennials the “giving generation” (http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2013/12/11/millennials-most-giving/3962781/), and noted that millennials prefer to see their contributions as investments (http://www.npr.org/sections/alltechconsidered/2014/10/13/338295367/how-millennials-are-reshaping-charity-and-online-giving) in a cause they care about instead of solely a donation.
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